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How To Install Fully Functional Mac OS X Lion Virtual Machine inside Windows

How to create and install Mac OS X Lion Virtual Machine inside your Windows 7

If Hackintosh is not new to you, you will have no problem to follow along with this guide. If you are new to this “Hackintosh” thing, don’t worry this isn’t the real Hackintosh and installing on a Virtual Machine meaning it doesn’t matter what you do, you can always recover or start from scratch again without damaging your perfectly working Windows 7 environment.

Requirements:

  • You must have an Intel CPU, if you have an AMD CPU then this will NOT working for you.
  • Check make sure your Intel CPU has virtualization technology and is enabled from your BIOS.
  • At least 4GB of RAM (less than this will slow your system down very significant margin)
  • At least 20 GB of Hard Drive space

To start, here are the following tools and items you need to have:

  • VMware Workstation 7.1+ (get the latest version) or even better free version of VMware Player will work as well
  • After many readers’ respond, it looks like it’s a good idea to download and install VMware Workstation even with a free trail, for initial setups. Afterwards you can use VMware Player to run the VM.
  • Download the Mac OS X VMware unlocker mirror1mirror2and other helper  ([UPDATE] VMware unlocker link)
  • Download the Audio / Sound driver for VMware Mac OS X Lion if you want to get audio working as well (thanks to Manas commentator)
  • Download the bootable “Mac OS X Lion bootable vmdk” (find it on Google should be around 4.12GB in size)

Make sure you have the above tool ready, after you’ve installed VMware workstation run the Mac OS X VMware unlocker

Pick a location to extract the file.

Go to the location you’ve just extracted the file. should be something like this  Mac OS X Lion VMware FilesVMware Unlocker – Mac OS X Guest

shift + right click on the folder “VMware Workstation Unlocker –Windows” to “Open command window here”

Run “windows.bat” command

When this is done you should see something like the above screenshot.

Now navigate back to the folder Mac OS X Lion VMware FilesMac OS X Lion find the named Mac OS X Lion.vmx and double click.

This will open the VMware Workstation, you should see something like the following

Now click Edit virtual machine settings

Here you want to add a new hard disk which will contain the vmdk you’ve just downloaded. Click “Add..” select “Hard Disk” Click next

Select “Use an existing virtual disk”

find_the_vmdk_thumb

Browse and find the vmdk file, click “Open”

click_finish

Click “Finish” when you done.

The reason you want to add another hard drive is that in the original setting, the 40GB has no OS on it, therefore VMware will try to boot off the OS from the second disk (the vmdk file) which will load and boot into Lion Installer.

mac_os_x_lion

Now back to the main menu, click “Power on the virtual machine”

From now here just following the on screen instruction to install Mac OS X Lion. Should be pretty straight forward.

When you done installing Mac OS X Lion on the Virtual Machine, go download the VMware tools inside the new Mac OS X Lion

install_VMware_tools

Double click “Install VMware Tools”

VMware_tools

After you finish installing the VMware tools, reboot the machine now you should have native screen resolutions.

display_after_install_VMware

From now on, it’s highly suggested to take a snapshot of the working VM. Incase in the future you done anything that messed up the machine you can always rollback to previous working state with the save of snapshot. From this moment on, you can also remove the second hard drive (the bootable Lion installer vmdk file) that you’ve added to the VM earlier.

Update to 10.7.2

Here are the steps to enable your VM successfully update to the latest 10.7.2 Lion which includes iCloud and many other integrations.

1. Download the 10.7.2 combo update from Apple’s website, don’t try to update it fromSoftware Update.

2. Don’t apply the update yet, make sure you have taken the snapshot of your current system

3. Open Terminal inside Lion

4. run the following command, including the dot at the end.

cp -r /System/Library/Extensions/AppleLSIFusionMPT.kext .

5. Now apply the update, but don’t reboot after it’s finished.

6. now go back to terminal and at the same directory location run the following command

7. sudo rm -rf /System/Library/Extensions/AppleLSIFusionMPT.kext

8. sudo cp -r AppleLSIFusionMPT.kext /System/Library/Extensions

9. reboot

10.7.2


Update to 10.7.3

1. Make sure you have updated your VM to 10.7.2 before proceed.

2. Download the OS X Lion update 10.7.3 here  (due to CUI bugs in the 10.7.3 update Apple has removed the download and redirect all the update to combo update, you can still try to use the combo update to update your VM Lion, I’m getting mixed results, some reported working just fine some didn’t. If you wish to get the update from 10.7.2 to 10.7.3 you can get the alternative download not from Apple herehttp://imzdl.com/info/480)

3. Take a snapshot before update

4. Repeat step 3-9 from previous steps in 10.7.2 update and you are good to go.

Note: Things you need to know, in order to keep your VMware Lion Hackintosh up to date, you need to apply update one at a time. Ex, from a fresh install image, you need to first apply 10.7.1 update, then when the update is successful, you need to update your VM to 10.7.2, and finally to 10.7.3. If you try to directly update to 10.7.3 using combo update it doesn’t seems to be working. Good luck !

2012-02-02_0954


Optional – Enable VMware Shared Folder

After you’ve had a fully working Lion you can enable the VMware share folder to your Windows 7 host machine. So this way the VM will have access to your Windows 7 file.

To do this, go to the “Virtual Machine Settings” when it was powered off.

enable_share_folder_thumb

Go under options tab, select “Shared Folders”

Pick “Always enable” and click “OK”

add_share_folder

Go “Browse..” the folder that you wish to share to.

find_the_path

From here you can pick and choose to make the folder to be “Read-only” or “Enable this share”

enable_this_share

That’s all there is. Finish the wizard and power on the VM again you should now see the mount folder on your Lion desktop that points to your Windows 7 shared folder.

For a long time Linux users have been able to install their OS onto a portable USB drive, but Windows just caught up. Read on to find out how you can install Windows 8 onto a USB drive so you can take it wherever you go.

Note: This was written on the RTM version of Windows 8 Enterprise and you will need to have an RTM build of the Enterprise edition to complete the steps in this article.

Using Windows To Go to Create a Portable Workspace

Press the Win + X keyboard combination and select Control Panel from the context menu.

You will need to change your Control Panel view to the Small Icons view.

You should now see Windows To Go near the bottom of the Control Panel, click on it.

You will now need to select the USB drive you would like to turn into a portable workspace, then click next.

The wizard will automatically scan your CD\DVD and Removable drives for valid Windows installation files, once you have selected a version of Windows click next.

Note: If you store your installation files elsewhere you will need to add it as a search location.

You can optionally set a BitLocker password, but we’ll pass on this option for now.

Once you have reached the end of the wizard, you will be warned that your USB drive will be formatted. You can then click on create to kick of the creation process.

That’s all there is to it, you now have a bootable USB with Windows on it.

Note: Your portable USB will not show up in Explorer, this leaves us with a problem later on when you don’t need to use it as a Portable Workspace anymore.

How To Reformat Your Windows To Go USB Drive

If you’re done using Windows on a drive, you can reformat the drive, but you’ll need to open a command prompt and type diskpart, then press enter.

Once you enter Diskpart you will need to find out which drive is the one you need to format, the list disk command will show you all the drive currently connected to your system. Take note of your drive number because we will need it in the next step.

We now need to select the disk, you can simply use the select disk command along with your drive number from the previous step.

Now that the disk is selected we can go ahead and wipe it.

Note: Clean is a ruthless command that will wipe all the file systems off your drive without any warnings, if you have selected the wrong drive previously this will result is a loss of data so make sure you have the right drive selected.

We can now use the Win + R keyboard combination to bring up the run box  and open Disk Management.

As soon as the Management console opens you will need to initialize the disk.

Then you can go ahead and create your drives partition.

That’s all there is to it.